Tropical Storm Imelda, Hurricane Humberto update
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Tropical Storm Imelda is forecast to grow into the season’s fourth hurricane on Tuesday with a path that could make a direct hit on Bermuda, according to the National Hurricane Center.
Hurricane Humberto's swells will probably cause "life-threatening surf and rip current conditions," the National Hurricane Center warned.
A strengthening storm brewing near the Bahamas could bring flooding rain, coastal surge, damaging winds and dangerous surf to the Southeast.
Every hurricane season, they make the rounds. Spaghetti plots bring data from various forecast models to life, an important tool in tropical forecasting.
Imelda is the ninth named storm of the 2025 Atlantic hurricane season and is expected to strengthen into a hurricane on Tuesday.
A combination of weather factors and geography helped make it one of the most brutal storms in the modern history of hurricanes.
Article first published: Tuesday, Sept. 30, 2025, 11 a.m. ET
1don MSN
Hurricane Humberto could mingle with another developing storm in what's called the Fujiwhara effect
That's an unlikely outcome, said CBS News meteorologist Nikki Nolan. But if such a collision does occur, it could produce what's called the Fujiwhara effect, a rare phenomenon in which two different storms merge and become entangled around a newly formed, common center.
More than 2 million New Englanders were without power. Howling winds were gusting 115 miles per hour. Hurricane Gloria was dubbed the “storm of the century” when it barreled into Long Island and New England on Sept. 27, 1985.